A game played with the traditional board game "guess who" but with slightly different rules. The only difference is that all questions must be subjective in nature. There should be no way to be 100% sure if you are elimating the correct people or not. No one ever really wins, but it is really fun.
Sample questions:
"Is, or has your person ever been, a librarian?"
"Is your person racist?"
"Is your person a member of a wine-of-the-month club?"
"Does your person own multiple cats?"
Examples of questions not allowed in subjective guess who:
"Does your person have a mustache?"
"Does your person have long hair?"
Subjective Vagueness is the type of vagueness used to refer to concepts and ideas that depend on each one's subjective to be applicable. The term applies to soft sciences and spiritual and extraphysical issues, which depend from a subjective view and an empathetic and sensitive analysis in most cases.
"Subjective Vagueness and Objective Vagueness are really useful to determine what is a hard science, a soft science and a spiritual science, but both are misused by skepticals for call everything as pseudoscience."
"Subjective Vagueness and Objective Vagueness were created as way to show a part of the Problem of Pseudoscience and how it could be possible to slove it."
"It is not because something has subjective vagueness, that this concept is a pseudoscience, remember of that."